Browning v. Berg

118 S.W.2d 1017, 196 Ark. 595, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 236
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 13, 1938
Docket4-5111
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 118 S.W.2d 1017 (Browning v. Berg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Browning v. Berg, 118 S.W.2d 1017, 196 Ark. 595, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 236 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

Griffin Smith, C. J.

For herself, and on behalf of her minor children, Julia Koers Browning prosecutes this appeal from a decree awarding dower to Clara Berg Koers. While the suit was pending Mrs. Koers died, and the action was revived in the name of Fred C. Berg, administrator, et als.

The administrator’s intestate was the widow of Georgé Victor Koers. Mr. Koers is a brother of Mrs. Browning.

By will George V. Koers named Union National Bank trustee of his estate, directing payment to his wife of a sufficient sum “to support her in that degree and station of life to which she is entitled,” to be not less than $100 per month; also, that she select any house to be used “free of any rent or other charges.” There was this provision: “In the event of the death of my wife, Clara Berg Koers, and there shall be no children of our marriage or any of their descendants surviving her, then upon her death the trust hereby created shall terminate and all of the property in the hands of the said trustee, including my accumulated income thereon, shall be by said trustee transferred, conveyed and delivered to the children of my sister, Julia Koers Browning, including any children which may be hereafter born to her prior to the date of the death of my wife. ... In the event of any sale of real property by said trustee, I hereby request that my sister, Mrs. Julia Koers Browning, be given the opportunity to purchase said property at the price obtainable and acceptable to said trustee.”

No children were born to Mr. and Mrs. Koers.

By appropriate proceedings Mrs. Koers renounced the will and elected to take dower, thereafter filing her complaint in chancery. By an order of August 2, 1935, from which there was no appeal, the court determined that the value of personal property was $27,413.21, and assigned to Mrs. Koers a one-half interest therein, less $4,000 previously advanced. There was a further finding that certain real properties in Pulaski and Lonoke counties, ormed by Koers at the time of his death, were new acquisitions, and that certain other properties were of ancestral origin. Included in the property acquired during the life of George V. Koers was the homestead in Little Rock. As to all new acquisitions the court found that the widow was endowed of an undivided one-half interest in fee simple. There Avas also a finding designating the ancestral estate, and that the widow Avas entitled to a one-half interest therein for life.

There was this further finding: “Commissioners should be appointed to lay off and assign to the plaintiff in severalty and in fee simple title her dower interest in that part of the real estate owned by George Victor Koers at the time of his death as a new acquisition, and to lay off and assign to said plaintiff in severalty, for and during her natural life, her doAver interest in that portion of the aforesaid real estate OAvned by George Victor Koers as an ancestral estate; provided, that of the aforesaid real estate there shall be assigned to the plaintiff, to be held by her as tenant in common, with the owners, as tenants in common, of the other undivided interests therein, [certain other properties described in the decree].”

The commissioners named in the decree listed real property under eight descriptions of the aggregate value of $40,000. Following the itemization there is this: “Taking into consideration the cash or extrinsic value of said property, together with the quantity, quality and intrinsic value thereof and the legal interests of the plaintiffs and defendants in and to said property, and in carrying out the terms of the decree herein to lay off and assign to the plaintiff, Clara Berg Koers, in severalty her dower interest in the aforesaid real estate, we . . . have laid off and assigned to the'plaintiff in severalty and in fee simple title the following.” Five tracts were then described, of the aggregate value of $16,500, and it was said: “After making said assignment of said property in severalty and in fee simple title to the plaintiff as her dower interest in the real estate described in said decree, there is left to the defendants in this action the following described real estate in fee simple title.”

Three tracts of the aggregate value of $23,500 are set out, with the comment: “Your commissioners further state that they have used their best efforts in making the assignment of dower to the plaintiff in accordance with the provisions and terms of the decree.”

Among the five items aggregating $16,500 assigned (o the widow in fee were lots 11 of block 425, and 19- of block 22, one-half being of ancestral origin, and one-half new acquisition. Full values were $2,500 and $4,500, respectively. Deducting one-half the value of lot 11 ($1,250), and one-half the value of lot 19 ($2,250) as interests apportionable to ancestral classification, it will be seen that of the five pieces of property recommended by the commissioners to be assigned to the widow in fee simple, one-half of the aggregate value of lots 11 and 19, or $3,500, was of ancestral origin, and such values were used by the commissioners in arriving' at the recommended award of $16,500 to the widow in fee.

Report of the commissioners was filed January 22, 1936. March 26 exceptions were filed, in which it was stated: ‘ ‘ The commissioners . . . have laid off and awarded to Clara Berg Koers, the widow, all of the lands in which she holds any fee simple interest, although she only holds from a one-fourth to a one-half interest in each of said pieces of property; that they awarded to the defendants herein in fee only those properties which they already owned the entire fee of and in which Clara Berg Koers owns no portion of the fee. That said division is further unjust and unequal.in that the properties awarded to Clara Berg Koers have an estimated net income annually of $2,355.87, whereas the property awarded the defendants has an estimated net annual income of only $1,309.98. That the proper division to make, of said lands would be to divide the lands held as a new acquisition in said estate by awarding equal portions of said lands in value to plaintiff and to defendants and to permit the properties of the ancestral estate to continue in the possession of the trustee appointed in the will, or such other trustee as may he selected by the court, and have said trustee divide the net income on said property between the plaintiff and the defendants.”

The report was approved and confirmed May 6,1936.

September 28, 1936, there was this order: “The death of Clara Berg Ivoers is suggested, and the court is of the opinion that the decree heretofore rendered in this cause should be vacated. . . . This order is granted to enable the defendants to present the matter at the coming term of court. ’ ’

In response to motion of November 7, 1936, to revive, it was urged: “Final decree was entered in this cause on the 6th day of May, 1936, and no appeal has been taken therefrom. Clara Berg Koers died August 24, 1936. The order entered in this action on the 28th day of September, 1936, vacating and setting aside the decree, was made without notice to these defendants and without any petition being filed setting forth grounds for vacating said, decree and without any testimony being heard in support of the order. . . . Said order . . . is therefore null and void.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W.2d 1017, 196 Ark. 595, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/browning-v-berg-ark-1938.